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Protestants Abroad - How Missionaries Tried to Change the World but Changed America (Hardcover)
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Protestants Abroad - How Missionaries Tried to Change the World but Changed America (Hardcover)
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They sought to transform the world, and ended up transforming
twentieth-century America Between the 1890s and the Vietnam era,
tens of thousands of American Protestant missionaries were
stationed throughout the non-European world. They expected to
change the peoples they encountered abroad, but those foreign
peoples ended up changing the missionaries. Missionary experience
made many of these Americans critical of racism, imperialism, and
religious orthodoxy. When they returned home, the missionaries and
their children liberalized their own society. Protestants Abroad
reveals the untold story of how these missionary-connected
individuals left their enduring mark on American public life as
writers, diplomats, academics, church officials, publishers,
foundation executives, and social activists. David Hollinger
provides riveting portraits of such figures as Pearl Buck, John
Hersey, and Life and Time publisher Henry Luce, former "mish kids"
who strove through literature and journalism to convince white
Americans of the humanity of other peoples. Hollinger describes how
the U.S. government's need for people with language skills and
direct experience in Asian societies catapulted dozens of
missionary-connected individuals into prominent roles in
intelligence and diplomacy. He also shows how Edwin Reischauer and
other scholars with missionary backgrounds led the growth of
Foreign Area Studies in universities during the Cold War. Hollinger
shows how the missionary contingent advocated multiculturalism at
home and anticolonialism abroad, pushed their churches in
ecumenical and social-activist directions, and joined with
cosmopolitan Jewish intellectuals to challenge traditional
Protestant cultural hegemony and promote a pluralist vision of
American life. Missionary cosmopolitans were the Anglo-Protestant
counterparts of the New York Jewish intelligentsia of the same era.
Protestants Abroad sheds new light on how missionary-connected
American Protestants played a crucial role in the development of
modern American liberalism, and helped Americans reimagine their
nation as a global citizen.
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